Building on the work of Berlew and Hall (1966),who found significant positive relationships between the difficulty of first jobs and later managerial success, this study of graduating seniors in business administration explores the attitudes of business graduates toward difficult training characterized by qualified trainee failures. Murkison (1986) reported positive relationships between training in which high attrition rates occured and later success in administrative positions, but no work has been found that determines the willingness of recent college graduates to undergo such training experiences. It appears that we need an answer to this question since there are now articles appearing in the popular (Black 1988) and business press (Phalon 1987) having to do with difficult managerial training. The ever‐present Japanese seem to have a head start here according to Waldman (1988).A successful effort to develop a reliable scale to measure predisposition toward difficult training is reported. Results of this study indicate that willingness levels are higher for males, persons with higher grades in college, and for those whose hometowns are very small or very large. Directions for future research are proposed.
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28 October 1989
This article was originally published in
Mid-American Journal of Business
Review Article|
October 28 1989
Difficult Management Training: Will it Fly in the USA? Available to Purchase
Gene Murkison
Gene Murkison
Georgia Southern College
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1935-522X
Print ISSN: 0895-1772
© MCB UP Limited
1989
Mid-American Journal of Business (1989) 4 (2): 45–48.
Citation
Murkison G (1989), "Difficult Management Training: Will it Fly in the USA?". Mid-American Journal of Business, Vol. 4 No. 2 pp. 45–48, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/19355181198900018
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